Cultural studies: theory and practice
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Los Angeles [u.a.]
SAGE Publ.
2008
|
Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 525 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9781412924153 9781412924160 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | ¡■ f
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Foreword by Paul Willis
xxi
PART ONE: CULTURE AND CULTURAL STUDIES
1
1
An Introduction to Cultural Studies
3
Concerning this book
3
Selectivity
3
The language-game of cultural studies
4
Cultural studies as politics
4
The parameters of cultural studies
5
The Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
6
Disciplining cultural studies
6
Key concepts in cultural studies
7
Culture and signifying practices
7
Representation
7
Materialism and non-reductionism
9
Articulation
9
Power
10
Popular culture
10
Texts and readers
10
Subjectivity and identity
11
The intellectual strands of cultural studies
12
Marxism and the centrality of class
12
Capitalism
13
Marxism and cultural studies
14
Culturalism and structuralism
15
Culture is ordinary
15
Structuralism
15
Deep structures of language
15
Culture as like a language
17
Poststructuralism (and postmodernism)
18
Derrida: the instability of language
18
VI
CONTENTS
Foucault and discursive
practices
20
Anti-essentialism
20
Postmodernism
21
Psychoanalysis and subjectivity
22
The Freudian self
22
The Oedipus complex
23
The politics of difference: feminism, race and
postcolonial
theory
23
Feminism
24
Race, ethnicity and
hybridity
24
Central problems in cultural studies
25
Language and the material
25
The textual character of culture
26
The location of culture
27
How is cultural change possible?
28
Rationality and its limits
29
The character of truth
30
Questions of methodology
31
Key methodologies in cultural studies
32
Ethnography
32
Textual approaches
35
Reception studies
36
The place of theory
37
Summary
38
2
Questions of Culture and Ideology
39
Culture with a capital C: the great and the good in the literary tradition
40
Leavisism
40
Culture is ordinary
41
The anthropological approach to culture
42
Culturalism: Hoggart, Thompson, Williams
43
Richard Hoggart: The Uses of Literacy
44
Edward Thompson: The Making of the English Working Class
44
Raymond Williams and cultural materialism
45
High culture/low culture: Aesthetics and the collapse of boundaries
46
A question of quality
47
Form and content
47
Ideological analysis
48
The problem of judgement
48
Mass culture: popular culture
49
Culture as mass deception
49
Criticisms of the Frankfurt School
50
CONTENTS
VII
Creative consumption
50
Popular culture
51
The popular is political
54
Culture and the social formation
54
Marxism and the metaphor of base and superstructure
54
The foundations of culture
55
Culture as class power
56
The specificity of culture
56
Williams: totality and the variable distance of practices
57
Relative autonomy and the specificity of cultural practices
57
Althusser and the social formation
58
Relative autonomy
59
Articulation and the circuit of culture
59
Two economies
60
The question of ideology
61
Marxism and false consciousness
62
Althusser and ideology
63
Ideological state apparatuses
63
Fragmented subjects
64
The double character of ideology
64
Althusser and cultural studies
65
Granisci,
ideology and hegemony
66
Cultural and ideological hegemony
66
ideology and popular culture
67
The instability of hegemony
68
Gramscian cultural studies
68
The problems of hegemony and ideology
69
Hegemony and fragmentation
69
Hegemony and power
70
Ideology as power
70
Ideology and misrecognition
71
What is ideology?
72
Summary
73
Culture, Meaning, Knowledge: The Linguistic Turn in Cultural Studies
75
Saussure
and semiotics
76
Signifying systems
76
Cultural codes
77
Barthes and mythology
79
Myth today
79
Polysemie
signs
81
VIII CONTENTS
Poststructuralism
and intertextuality
83
Derrida:
textuality
and différance
83
Nothing but signs
83
Différance
85
Derrida s postcards
86
Strategies of writing
86
Deconstruction
87
Derrida and cultural studies
89
Foucault:
discourse, practice and power
90
Discursive practices
90
Discourse and discipline
91
The productivity of power
92
The subjects of discourse
93
Post-Marxism and the discursive construction of the social
94
Deconstructing Marxism
94
The articulated social
95
Language and psychoanalysis:
Lacan
96
The mirror phase
97
The symbolic order
98
The unconscious as like a language
98
Problems with
Lacan
99
Language as use: Wittgenstein and Rorty
100
Wittgenstein s investigations
100
Language as a tool
100
Language-games
101
Lyotard and incommensurability
102
Rorty and the contingency of language
104
Anti-representationalism
104
Truth as social commendation
105
Describing and evaluating
105
Culture as conversation
106
Culture as performance
107
Discourse and the material
108
Indissolubility
108
Languages for purposes
109
Summary
110
4
Biology and Culture: Questions of Reductionism and Complexity 111
The problem of reductionism
112
Forms of reduction
113
CONTENTS
IX
Complexity and holism
114
The capabilities of science
115
Languages for purposes
117
The cultured body
118
A body of theory
120
The medical body
122
The evolved body of biology
124
Natural selection and the place of genes
124
Evolutionary culture
125
Evolutionary psychology
125
The evolved brain
126
Some implications for cultural studies
128
Biology and culture: the case of emotions
129
Understanding emotion
129
Evolution and emotion
129
The emotional brain
130
Cognition, culture and emotion
131
The cultural construction of emotion
131
The circuit of emotion
132
Emotion as experience
135
Identity and emotion
135
Merne
theory
135
Culture off the leash
136
Summary
137
PART TWO: THE CHANGING CONTEXT OF CULTURAL STUDIES
139
5
A New World Disorder?
141
Economy, technology and social class
142
Fordism
142
Post-Fordism
144
Reorganizing labour
145
The Regulation School
146
New Times
147
Post-industrial society and the reconfiguration of class identities
148
The rise of the service class
149
Disorganized capitalism
150
Organized capitalism
151
Déconcentration
and deindustrialization
151
Patterns of consumption
152
X
CONTENTS
Postmodernization 152
The question of determination
153
Globalization
155
The dynamism of modernity
155
Global economic flows
156
Global cultural flows
157
Disjunctive flows
158
Homogenization and fragmentation
159
Cultural imperialism and its critics
159
Hybridity
and complex cultural flows
161
Glocalization
162
Creolization
163
Globalization and power
163
Modernity as loss
164
The state, politics and New Social Movements
167
The decline of the nation-state and the end of history?
167
Form and competence
168
Autonomy
168
Legitimation
169
The fall of communism
169
The end of history?
170
New Social Movements
171
Displacing class?
172
Life-politics
173
Symbolic communities
174
Summary
175
6
Enter Postmodernism
177
Defining the terms
177
The institutions of modernity
178
The industrial revolution
179
Surveillance
179
The dynamism of capitalist modernity
179
The nation-state and military power
180
Modernism and culture
181
Modernism as a cultural experience
181
Risk, doubt and
reflexivity
182
The
flâneur
183
The dark side of modernity
183
Modernism as aesthetic style
185
The problems of realism
185
CONTENTS
XI
Fragmentation and the universal
187
The cultural politics of modernism
187
Modernisms
188
Modern and postmodern knowledge
188
The enlightenment project
188
Scientific management
189
Marxism as enlightenment philosophy
189
Scientific laws and the principle of doubt
190
The critique of the enlightenment
191
Foucault
192
Postmodernism as the end of grand narratives
195
The end of epistemology
196
Relativism or positionality?
197
The promise of postmodernism (or modernity as an unfinished project?)
197
Politics without foundations
198
Modernity as an unfinished project
198
The public sphere
199
A normative project
200
Postmodern culture
200
The reflexive postmodern
201
Postmodernism and the collapse of cultural boundaries
201
Bricolage
and intertextuality
202
The aestheticization of everyday life
203
Postmodern aesthetics in television
203
Postmodern detectives and gangsters
204
The cartoon postmodern
205
Culture jamming
205
Subverting adverts
206
Evaluating postmodern culture
207
Depthless culture
207
Implosions and simulations
207
The cultural style of late capitalism
208
Transgressive postmodernism
210
Summary
211
PART THREE: SITES OF CULTURAL STUDIES
213
7
Issues of Subjectivity and Identity
215
Subjectivity and identity
215
Personhood as a cultural production
216
Essentialism and anti-essentialism
217
XII CONTENTS
Self-identity as a project
217
Social identities
218
The fracturing of identity
218
The enlightenment subject
219
The sociological subject
219
The postmodern subject
220
Social theory and the fractured subject
220
The historical subject of Marxism
221
Psychoanalysis and subjectivity
221
Feminism and difference
223
Language and identity
224
The Foucauldian subject
225
The articulated self
227
Anti-essentialism and cultural identity
227
The articulation of identities
229
Sites of interaction
231
Agency and the politics of identity
231
The question of agency
231
Foucault
and the problem of agency
232
Giddens
and
structuration
theory
232
The duality of structure
233
The concept of agency
234
Agency as making a difference
235
Choice and determination
235
Modes of discourse
236
Originality
236
Innovation and change
237
Anti-essentialism, feminism and the politics of identity
238
Biology as discourse
238
Sex and gender
239
Is a universal feminism possible?
240
The project of feminism
242
Creating new languages
243
Challenging the critique of identity
243
Strategic essentialism
244
Summary
245
8
Ethnicity, Race and Nation
246
Race and ethnicity
247
Racialization
247
CONTENTS XIII
Different racisms
248
The concept of ethnicity
249
Ethnicity and power
250
National identities
252
The nation-state
252
Narratives of unity
252
The imagined community
253
Criticisms of Anderson
254
Diaspora and hybrid identities
255
The idea of diaspora
255
The Black Atlantic
256
Types of
hybridity
257
The
hybridity
of all culture
258
Hybridity
and British Asians
258
From sojourners to settlers
259
Switching cultural codes
259
Multiple identities
260
Intersections and boundary crossings
261
Weaving the patterns of identity
263
Race, ethnicity, representation
264
Savages and slaves
264
Plantation images
265
The criminalization of black Britons
265
Orientalism
266
Television and the representation of race and ethnicity
267
Whites only
267
Stereotyped representations
268
Signs of change
269
Menace to society
269
Assimilationist
strategies
270
The ambiguities of representation
270
The new ghetto aesthetic
271
EastEnders
272
I ll Fly Away
272
The question of positive images
274
Postcolonial
literature
275
Models of
postcolonial
literature
276
Domination and subordination
277
Hybridization and creolization
277
Summary
278
XIV CONTENTS
9
Sex,
Subjectivity and Representation
280
Feminism and cultural studies
280
Patriarchy, equality and difference
281
Liberal and socialist feminism
282
Difference feminism
282
Black and
postcolonial
feminism
283
Poststructuralist
feminism
283
Postfeminism
283
Sex, gender and identity
285
The science of sex
286
Women s difference
288
Irigaray and womanspeak
288
The social construction of sex and gender
290
Sex as a discursive construct
290
Sexed
subjects
291
Foucault:
subjectivity and sexuality
291
Sex and the discursive construction of the body
291
The feminist critique of
Foucault
292
Ethics and agency
293
Psychoanalysis, feminism and
sexed
subjectivity
294
Regulating sexuality
294
Chodorow: masculinity and femininity
294
Phallocentric psychoanalysis
295
Julia
Kristeva:
the
semiotic
and the symbolic
296
Judith Butler: between
Foucault
and psychoanalysis
298
The performativity of sex
298
Identification and abjection
299
Drag: recasting the symbolic
299
The discipline and the fiction of identity
301
Men and masculinity
301
Problematic masculinity
304
The roots of male addiction
304
The betrayal of the modern man
305
Gender, representation and media culture
306
Images of women
307
The bitch, the witch and the matriarch
307
Affirmation and denial
308
Women of Bollywood
308
The Taming of the Shrew
309
The problem of accuracy
309
Subject positions and the politics of representation
310
CONTENTS
XV
The slender body
310
The independent mother
311
Representing persons with AIDS
311
Madonna s performance
312
Raunch culture
312
The question of audiences
313
Summary
314
10
Television, Texts and Audiences
315
Television as text: news and ideology
316
Putting reality together
3
1
6
The manipulative model
318
The pluralist model
318
The hegemonic model
319
Agenda setting
320
Gulf War news
320
Presentational styles
321
Television as text: soap opera as popular television
322
Soap opera as a genre
322
Women and soap opera
325
Soap opera and the public sphere
325
The active audience
326
Encoding—decoding
327
The Nationwide audience
329
Watching Dallas
330
Ideology and resistance
330
Television audiences and cultural identity
331
The export of meaning
331
Localizing the global
332
Audiences, space and identity
333
Family space and global space
334
The globalization of television
334
The political economy of global television
335
Synergy and television ownership
336
Deregulation and reregulation
337
Global electronic culture
338
Media imperialism
338
Regionalization
339
The global and the local
339
Global postmodern culture
341
Hyperreality and TV simulations
342
XVI
CONTENTS
Consumer culture
343
Creative consumption
344
Summary
345
11
Digital Media Culture
346
Digital media
346
Digital divides
347
Cyberutopia
348
Information bomb
348
Cyberspace and democracy
349
The democratic vision
350
Intertextual hypertext
350
Web
2:0
participation
351
We can be heroes
352
Cyberactivism
352
Même
wars
353
The limitations to cyber democracy
355
Cyber capitalism
356
Intellectual property
357
Democracy in the balance
358
Computer gaming
359
Research paths
359
Addicted to games
360
Gaming and identity
360
Cyberspace race
361
Playing multiple identities
361
Cyberfeminism
363
Cyborg manifesto
363
Representation and regulation
365
The global economy of cyberspace
367
The information economy
367
Private space
368
Convergence and the mobile phone
368
The mobile phone
369
Digital imperialism
370
Summary
371
12
Cultural Space and Urban Place
373
Space and place in contemporary theory
374
Time-geography
374
Time-space
375
CONTENTS XVII
Space
and place
376
The social construction of place
377
Gendered space
377
The multiple spaces of Lagos
378
Cities as places
379
The Chicago School
380
Criticisms of urban studies
381
Political economy and the global city
382
Capitalism and the urban environment
382
Global cities
383
The post-industrial global city
384
The symbolic economy of cities
385
Cultural economics
386
The creative industries
388
Privatizing public space
389
The public culture of private elites
390
Disney: fantasy and surveillance
390
The postmodern city
391
Postmodern urbanization
391
Urban change: suburbs and edge cities
393
Urban unrest
394
Fortress LA
395
The excitement of the city
397
Cyberspace and the city
397
The information superhighway
398
Electronic urban networks
399
The informational city
400
Electronic homes in global space
402
The city as text
402
Classified spaces
403
The city which is not one
404
Summary
405
13
Youth, Style and Resistance
406
The emergence of youth
407
Youth as moratorium
407
Youth as cultural classification
408
The ambiguity of youth
409
Trouble and fun
409
Youth subcultures
410
Subterranean values
410
XVIII
CONTENTS
Magical solutions
411
Homologies
412
Motorbike boys
412
Resistance through rituals
413
The double articulation of youth
414
Teds, Mods and Skins
414
Signs of style
415
Critiques of subcultural theory
416
Youthful difference: class, gender, race
417
The self-damnation of the working class
417
Gendered youth
418
Another space for girls
418
Racialized youth
420
The artifice of black hair
421
Space: a global youth culture?
422
Rapping and raving around the globe
423
Syncretic global youth
424
After subcultures
425
Media spotlights
426
Media devils and subcultural hero(in)es
427
Postmodernism: the end of authenticity
427
Postmodern
bricoleurs
428
Claims to authenticity
429
Distinctions of taste
429
Creative consumption
430
Common culture
431
Resistance revisited
432
Resistance is conjunctural
432
Resistance as defence
433
Inside the whale
433
Hiding in the light
434
Tactics and strategies
436
Banality in cultural studies
436
Resistance: the normative stance of cultural critics
437
Summary
438
14
Cultural Politics and Cultural Policy
440
Cultural studies and cultural politics
441
Naming as cultural politics
441
Cultural politics: the influence of Gramsci
442
CONTENTS XIX
Winning hegemony
442
The role of intellectuals
444
Cultural studies as a political project
445
Gramscian texts
446
The cultural politics of difference
448
New languages of cultural politics
448
The politics of articulation
449
No class-belonging
450
The cut in language
451
Difference, ethnicity and the politics of representation
452
Invisibility and namelessness
452
Positive images
452
Multiculturalism and anti-racism
453
The politics of representation
453
Difference, citizenship and the public sphere
454
Habermas
and the public sphere
455
The democratic tradition
455
Radical democracy
456
Questioning cultural studies
456
The critique of cultural populism
457
A multiperspectival approach
458
The circuit of culture
458
The cultural policy debate
459
Redirecting the cultural studies project
460
Governmentality
460
Culture and power
461
Foucault
or Gramsci?
463
Policy and the problem of values
464
Shifting the command metaphors of cultural studies
465
The horizon of the thinkable
465
Criticism and policy
466
Neo-pragmatism and cultural studies
467
Pragmatism and cultural studies
468
Richard Rorty: politics without foundations
468
Anti-representationalism
468
Anti-foundationalism
469
Contingency, irony, solidarity
469
Truth as social commendation
469
Forging new languages
470
Prophetic pragmatism
470
XX
CONTENTS
Private identities and public politics
471
The implications of pragmatism for cultural studies
472
Summary
473
Glossary: The Language-Game of Cultural Studies
474
References
491
Index
513
|
adam_txt |
¡■"""f
и
о
η
Foreword by Paul Willis
xxi
PART ONE: CULTURE AND CULTURAL STUDIES
1
1
An Introduction to Cultural Studies
3
Concerning this book
3
Selectivity
3
The language-game of cultural studies
4
Cultural studies as politics
4
The parameters of cultural studies
5
The Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
6
Disciplining cultural studies
6
Key concepts in cultural studies
7
Culture and signifying practices
7
Representation
7
Materialism and non-reductionism
9
Articulation
9
Power
10
Popular culture
10
Texts and readers
10
Subjectivity and identity
11
The intellectual strands of cultural studies
12
Marxism and the centrality of class
12
Capitalism
13
Marxism and cultural studies
14
Culturalism and structuralism
15
Culture is ordinary
15
Structuralism
15
Deep structures of language
15
Culture as 'like a language'
17
Poststructuralism (and postmodernism)
18
Derrida: the instability of language
18
VI
CONTENTS
Foucault and discursive
practices
20
Anti-essentialism
20
Postmodernism
21
Psychoanalysis and subjectivity
22
The Freudian self
22
The Oedipus complex
23
The politics of difference: feminism, race and
postcolonial
theory
23
Feminism
24
Race, ethnicity and
hybridity
24
Central problems in cultural studies
25
Language and the material
25
The textual character of culture
26
The location of culture
27
How is cultural change possible?
28
Rationality and its limits
29
The character of truth
30
Questions of methodology
31
Key methodologies in cultural studies
32
Ethnography
32
Textual approaches
35
Reception studies
36
The place of theory
37
Summary
38
2
Questions of Culture and Ideology
39
Culture with a capital C: the great and the good in the literary tradition
40
Leavisism
40
Culture is ordinary
41
The anthropological approach to culture
42
Culturalism: Hoggart, Thompson, Williams
43
Richard Hoggart: The Uses of Literacy
44
Edward Thompson: The Making of the English Working Class
44
Raymond Williams and cultural materialism
45
High culture/low culture: Aesthetics and the collapse of boundaries
46
A question of quality
47
Form and content
47
Ideological analysis
48
The problem of judgement
48
Mass culture: popular culture
49
Culture as mass deception
49
Criticisms of the Frankfurt School
50
CONTENTS
VII
Creative consumption
50
Popular culture
51
The popular is political
54
Culture and the social formation
54
Marxism and the metaphor of base and superstructure
54
The foundations of culture
55
Culture as class power
56
The specificity of culture
56
Williams: totality and the variable distance of practices
57
Relative autonomy and the specificity of cultural practices
57
Althusser and the social formation
58
Relative autonomy
59
Articulation and the circuit of culture
59
Two economies
60
The question of ideology
61
Marxism and false consciousness
62
Althusser and ideology
63
Ideological state apparatuses
63
Fragmented subjects
64
The double character of ideology
64
Althusser and cultural studies
65
Granisci,
ideology and hegemony
66
Cultural and ideological hegemony
66
ideology and popular culture
67
The instability of hegemony
68
Gramscian cultural studies
68
The problems of hegemony and ideology
69
Hegemony and fragmentation
69
Hegemony and power
70
Ideology as power
70
Ideology and misrecognition
71
What is ideology?
72
Summary
73
Culture, Meaning, Knowledge: The Linguistic Turn in Cultural Studies
75
Saussure
and semiotics
76
Signifying systems
76
Cultural codes
77
Barthes and mythology
79
'Myth today'
79
Polysemie
signs
81
VIII CONTENTS
Poststructuralism
and intertextuality
83
Derrida:
textuality
and différance
83
Nothing but signs
83
Différance
85
Derrida's postcards
86
Strategies of writing
86
Deconstruction
87
Derrida and cultural studies
89
Foucault:
discourse, practice and power
90
Discursive practices
90
Discourse and discipline
91
The productivity of power
92
The subjects of discourse
93
Post-Marxism and the discursive construction of the 'social'
94
Deconstructing Marxism
94
The articulated social
95
Language and psychoanalysis:
Lacan
96
The mirror phase
97
The symbolic order
98
The unconscious as 'like a language'
98
Problems with
Lacan
99
Language as use: Wittgenstein and Rorty
100
Wittgenstein's investigations
100
Language as a tool
100
Language-games
101
Lyotard and incommensurability
102
Rorty and the contingency of language
104
Anti-representationalism
104
Truth as social commendation
105
Describing and evaluating
105
Culture as conversation
106
Culture as performance
107
Discourse and the material
108
Indissolubility
108
Languages for purposes
109
Summary
110
4
Biology and Culture: Questions of Reductionism and Complexity 111
The problem of reductionism
112
Forms of reduction
113
CONTENTS
IX
Complexity and holism
114
The capabilities of science
115
Languages for purposes
117
The cultured body
118
A body of theory
120
The medical body
122
The evolved body of biology
124
Natural selection and the place of genes
124
Evolutionary culture
125
Evolutionary psychology
125
The evolved brain
126
Some implications for cultural studies
128
Biology and culture: the case of emotions
129
Understanding emotion
129
Evolution and emotion
129
The emotional brain
130
Cognition, culture and emotion
131
The cultural construction of emotion
131
The circuit of emotion
132
Emotion as experience
135
Identity and emotion
135
Merne
theory
135
Culture off the leash
136
Summary
137
PART TWO: THE CHANGING CONTEXT OF CULTURAL STUDIES
139
5
A New World Disorder?
141
Economy, technology and social class
142
Fordism
142
Post-Fordism
144
Reorganizing labour
145
The Regulation School
146
'New Times'
147
Post-industrial society and the reconfiguration of class identities
148
The rise of the service class
149
Disorganized capitalism
150
Organized capitalism
151
Déconcentration
and deindustrialization
151
Patterns of consumption
152
X
CONTENTS
Postmodernization 152
The question of determination
153
Globalization
155
The dynamism of modernity
155
Global economic flows
156
Global cultural flows
157
Disjunctive flows
158
Homogenization and fragmentation
159
Cultural imperialism and its critics
159
Hybridity
and complex cultural flows
161
Glocalization
162
Creolization
163
Globalization and power
163
Modernity as loss
164
The state, politics and New Social Movements
167
The decline of the nation-state and the end of history?
167
Form and competence
168
Autonomy
168
Legitimation
169
The fall of communism
169
The end of history?
170
New Social Movements
171
Displacing class?
172
Life-politics
173
Symbolic communities
174
Summary
175
6
Enter Postmodernism
177
Defining the terms
177
The institutions of modernity
178
The industrial revolution
179
Surveillance
179
The dynamism of capitalist modernity
179
The nation-state and military power
180
Modernism and culture
181
Modernism as a cultural experience
181
Risk, doubt and
reflexivity
182
The
flâneur
183
The dark side of modernity
183
Modernism as aesthetic style
185
The problems of realism
185
CONTENTS
XI
Fragmentation and the universal
187
The cultural politics of modernism
187
Modernisms
188
Modern and postmodern knowledge
188
The enlightenment project
188
Scientific management
189
Marxism as enlightenment philosophy
189
Scientific laws and the principle of doubt
190
The critique of the enlightenment
191
Foucault
192
Postmodernism as the end of grand narratives
195
The end of epistemology
196
Relativism or positionality?
197
The promise of postmodernism (or modernity as an unfinished project?)
197
Politics without foundations
198
Modernity as an unfinished project
198
The public sphere
199
A normative project
200
Postmodern culture
200
The reflexive postmodern
201
Postmodernism and the collapse of cultural boundaries
201
Bricolage
and intertextuality
202
The aestheticization of everyday life
203
Postmodern aesthetics in television
203
Postmodern detectives and gangsters
204
The cartoon postmodern
205
Culture jamming
205
Subverting adverts
206
Evaluating postmodern culture
207
Depthless culture
207
Implosions and simulations
207
The cultural style of late capitalism
208
Transgressive postmodernism
210
Summary
211
PART THREE: SITES OF CULTURAL STUDIES
213
7
Issues of Subjectivity and Identity
215
Subjectivity and identity
215
Personhood as a cultural production
216
Essentialism and anti-essentialism
217
XII CONTENTS
Self-identity as a project
217
Social identities
218
The fracturing of identity
218
The enlightenment subject
219
The sociological subject
219
The postmodern subject
220
Social theory and the fractured subject
220
The historical subject of Marxism
221
Psychoanalysis and subjectivity
221
Feminism and difference
223
Language and identity
224
The Foucauldian subject
225
The articulated self
227
Anti-essentialism and cultural identity
227
The articulation of identities
229
Sites of interaction
231
Agency and the politics of identity
231
The question of agency
231
Foucault
and the problem of agency
232
Giddens
and
structuration
theory
232
The duality of structure
233
The concept of agency
234
Agency as making a difference
235
Choice and determination
235
Modes of discourse
236
Originality
236
Innovation and change
237
Anti-essentialism, feminism and the politics of identity
238
Biology as discourse
238
Sex and gender
239
Is a universal feminism possible?
240
The project of feminism
242
Creating 'new languages'
243
Challenging the critique of identity
243
Strategic essentialism
244
Summary
245
8
Ethnicity, Race and Nation
246
Race and ethnicity
247
Racialization
247
CONTENTS XIII
Different racisms
248
The concept of ethnicity
249
Ethnicity and power
250
National identities
252
The nation-state
252
Narratives of unity
252
The imagined community
253
Criticisms of Anderson
254
Diaspora and hybrid identities
255
The idea of diaspora
255
The Black Atlantic
256
Types of
hybridity
257
The
hybridity
of all culture
258
Hybridity
and British Asians
258
From 'sojourners to settlers'
259
Switching cultural codes
259
Multiple identities
260
Intersections and boundary crossings
261
Weaving the patterns of identity
263
Race, ethnicity, representation
264
Savages and slaves
264
Plantation images
265
The criminalization of black Britons
265
Orientalism
266
Television and the representation of race and ethnicity
267
Whites only
267
Stereotyped representations
268
Signs of change
269
Menace to society
269
Assimilationist
strategies
270
The ambiguities of representation
270
The new ghetto aesthetic
271
EastEnders
272
I'll Fly Away
272
The question of positive images
274
Postcolonial
literature
275
Models of
postcolonial
literature
276
Domination and subordination
277
Hybridization and creolization
277
Summary
278
XIV CONTENTS
9
Sex,
Subjectivity and Representation
280
Feminism and cultural studies
280
Patriarchy, equality and difference
281
Liberal and socialist feminism
282
Difference feminism
282
Black and
postcolonial
feminism
283
Poststructuralist
feminism
283
Postfeminism
283
Sex, gender and identity
285
The science of sex
286
Women's difference
288
Irigaray and womanspeak
288
The social construction of sex and gender
290
Sex as a discursive construct
290
Sexed
subjects
291
Foucault:
subjectivity and sexuality
291
Sex and the discursive construction of the body
291
The feminist critique of
Foucault
292
Ethics and agency
293
Psychoanalysis, feminism and
sexed
subjectivity
294
Regulating sexuality
294
Chodorow: masculinity and femininity
294
Phallocentric psychoanalysis
295
Julia
Kristeva:
the
semiotic
and the symbolic
296
Judith Butler: between
Foucault
and psychoanalysis
298
The performativity of sex
298
Identification and abjection
299
Drag: recasting the symbolic
299
The discipline and the fiction of identity
301
Men and masculinity
301
Problematic masculinity
304
The roots of male addiction
304
The betrayal of the modern man
305
Gender, representation and media culture
306
Images of women
307
The bitch, the witch and the matriarch
307
Affirmation and denial
308
Women of Bollywood
308
The Taming of the Shrew
309
The problem of accuracy
309
Subject positions and the politics of representation
310
CONTENTS
XV
The slender body
310
The independent mother
311
Representing persons with AIDS
311
Madonna's performance
312
Raunch culture
312
The question of audiences
313
Summary
314
10
Television, Texts and Audiences
315
Television as text: news and ideology
316
Putting reality together
3
1
6
The manipulative model
318
The pluralist model
318
The hegemonic model
319
Agenda setting
320
Gulf War news
320
Presentational styles
321
Television as text: soap opera as popular television
322
Soap opera as a genre
322
Women and soap opera
325
Soap opera and the public sphere
325
The active audience
326
Encoding—decoding
327
The Nationwide audience
329
Watching Dallas
330
Ideology and resistance
330
Television audiences and cultural identity
331
The export of meaning
331
Localizing the global
332
Audiences, space and identity
333
Family space and global space
334
The globalization of television
334
The political economy of global television
335
Synergy and television ownership
336
Deregulation and reregulation
337
Global electronic culture
338
Media imperialism
338
Regionalization
339
The global and the local
339
Global postmodern culture
341
Hyperreality and TV simulations
342
XVI
CONTENTS
Consumer culture
343
Creative consumption
344
Summary
345
11
Digital Media Culture
346
Digital media
346
Digital divides
347
Cyberutopia
348
Information bomb
348
Cyberspace and democracy
349
The democratic vision
350
Intertextual hypertext
350
Web
2:0
participation
351
'We can be heroes'
352
Cyberactivism
352
Même
wars
353
The limitations to cyber democracy
355
Cyber capitalism
356
Intellectual property
357
Democracy in the balance
358
Computer gaming
359
Research paths
359
Addicted to games
360
Gaming and identity
360
Cyberspace race
361
Playing multiple identities
361
Cyberfeminism
363
Cyborg manifesto
363
Representation and regulation
365
The global economy of cyberspace
367
The information economy
367
Private space
368
Convergence and the mobile phone
368
The mobile phone
369
Digital imperialism
370
Summary
371
12
Cultural Space and Urban Place
373
Space and place in contemporary theory
374
Time-geography
374
Time-space
375
CONTENTS XVII
Space
and place
376
The social construction of place
377
Gendered space
377
The multiple spaces of Lagos
378
Cities as places
379
The Chicago School
380
Criticisms of urban studies
381
Political economy and the global city
382
Capitalism and the urban environment
382
Global cities
383
The post-industrial global city
384
The symbolic economy of cities
385
Cultural economics
386
The creative industries
388
Privatizing public space
389
The public culture of private elites
390
Disney: fantasy and surveillance
390
The postmodern city
391
Postmodern urbanization
391
Urban change: suburbs and edge cities
393
Urban unrest
394
Fortress LA
395
The excitement of the city
397
Cyberspace and the city
397
The information superhighway
398
Electronic urban networks
399
The informational city
400
Electronic homes in global space
402
The city as text
402
Classified spaces
403
The city which is not one
404
Summary
405
13
Youth, Style and Resistance
406
The emergence of youth
407
Youth as moratorium
407
Youth as cultural classification
408
The ambiguity of youth
409
Trouble and fun
409
Youth subcultures
410
Subterranean values
410
XVIII
CONTENTS
Magical solutions
411
Homologies
412
Motorbike boys
412
Resistance through rituals
413
The double articulation of youth
414
Teds, Mods and Skins
414
Signs of style
415
Critiques of subcultural theory
416
Youthful difference: class, gender, race
417
The self-damnation of the working class
417
Gendered youth
418
Another space for girls
418
Racialized youth
420
The artifice of black hair
421
Space: a global youth culture?
422
Rapping and raving around the globe
423
Syncretic global youth
424
After subcultures
425
Media spotlights
426
Media devils and subcultural hero(in)es
427
Postmodernism: the end of authenticity
427
Postmodern
bricoleurs
428
Claims to authenticity
429
Distinctions of taste
429
Creative consumption
430
Common culture
431
Resistance revisited
432
Resistance is conjunctural
432
Resistance as defence
433
Inside the whale
433
Hiding in the light
434
Tactics and strategies
436
Banality in cultural studies
436
Resistance: the normative stance of cultural critics
437
Summary
438
14
Cultural Politics and Cultural Policy
440
Cultural studies and cultural politics
441
Naming as cultural politics
441
Cultural politics: the influence of Gramsci
442
CONTENTS XIX
Winning hegemony
442
The role of intellectuals
444
Cultural studies as a political project
445
Gramscian texts
446
The cultural politics of difference
448
New languages of cultural politics
448
The politics of articulation
449
No class-belonging
450
The 'cut' in language
451
Difference, ethnicity and the politics of representation
452
Invisibility and namelessness
452
Positive images
452
Multiculturalism and anti-racism
453
The politics of representation
453
Difference, citizenship and the public sphere
454
Habermas
and the public sphere
455
The democratic tradition
455
Radical democracy
456
Questioning cultural studies
456
The critique of cultural populism
457
A multiperspectival approach
458
The circuit of culture
458
The cultural policy debate
459
Redirecting the cultural studies project
460
Governmentality
460
Culture and power
461
Foucault
or Gramsci?
463
Policy and the problem of values
464
Shifting the command metaphors of cultural studies
465
The horizon of the thinkable
465
Criticism and policy
466
Neo-pragmatism and cultural studies
467
Pragmatism and cultural studies
468
Richard Rorty: politics without foundations
468
Anti-representationalism
468
Anti-foundationalism
469
Contingency, irony, solidarity
469
Truth as social commendation
469
Forging new languages
470
Prophetic pragmatism
470
XX
CONTENTS
Private identities and public politics
471
The implications of pragmatism for cultural studies
472
Summary
473
Glossary: The Language-Game of Cultural Studies
474
References
491
Index
513 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Barker, Chris 1955- |
author_GND | (DE-588)135669014 |
author_facet | Barker, Chris 1955- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Barker, Chris 1955- |
author_variant | c b cb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV023253498 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HM623 |
callnumber-raw | HM623 |
callnumber-search | HM623 |
callnumber-sort | HM 3623 |
callnumber-subject | HM - Sociology |
classification_rvk | AK 18000 LB 30000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)163333893 (DE-599)BSZ271483695 |
dewey-full | 306 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 306 - Culture and institutions |
dewey-raw | 306 |
dewey-search | 306 |
dewey-sort | 3306 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Allgemeines Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Allgemeines Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
edition | 3. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV023253498 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T20:28:54Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:14:12Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781412924153 9781412924160 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016438824 |
oclc_num | 163333893 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-384 |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-384 |
physical | XXIV, 525 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | SAGE Publ. |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Barker, Chris 1955- Verfasser (DE-588)135669014 aut Cultural studies theory and practice Chris Barker 3. ed. Los Angeles [u.a.] SAGE Publ. 2008 XXIV, 525 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Culturele studies gtt Culture Kultursoziologe (DE-588)4398833-7 gnd rswk-swf Kulturphilosophie (DE-588)4165986-7 gnd rswk-swf Kultursoziologie (DE-588)4133431-0 gnd rswk-swf Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd rswk-swf Volkskultur (DE-588)4063849-2 gnd rswk-swf Kulturwissenschaften (DE-588)4033597-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Kulturwissenschaften (DE-588)4033597-5 s Kultursoziologe (DE-588)4398833-7 s Kulturphilosophie (DE-588)4165986-7 s Volkskultur (DE-588)4063849-2 s 1\p DE-604 Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 s 2\p DE-604 Kultursoziologie (DE-588)4133431-0 s 3\p DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016438824&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 3\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Barker, Chris 1955- Cultural studies theory and practice Culturele studies gtt Culture Kultursoziologe (DE-588)4398833-7 gnd Kulturphilosophie (DE-588)4165986-7 gnd Kultursoziologie (DE-588)4133431-0 gnd Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd Volkskultur (DE-588)4063849-2 gnd Kulturwissenschaften (DE-588)4033597-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4398833-7 (DE-588)4165986-7 (DE-588)4133431-0 (DE-588)4037877-9 (DE-588)4063849-2 (DE-588)4033597-5 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Cultural studies theory and practice |
title_auth | Cultural studies theory and practice |
title_exact_search | Cultural studies theory and practice |
title_exact_search_txtP | Cultural studies theory and practice |
title_full | Cultural studies theory and practice Chris Barker |
title_fullStr | Cultural studies theory and practice Chris Barker |
title_full_unstemmed | Cultural studies theory and practice Chris Barker |
title_short | Cultural studies |
title_sort | cultural studies theory and practice |
title_sub | theory and practice |
topic | Culturele studies gtt Culture Kultursoziologe (DE-588)4398833-7 gnd Kulturphilosophie (DE-588)4165986-7 gnd Kultursoziologie (DE-588)4133431-0 gnd Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd Volkskultur (DE-588)4063849-2 gnd Kulturwissenschaften (DE-588)4033597-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Culturele studies Culture Kultursoziologe Kulturphilosophie Kultursoziologie Massenmedien Volkskultur Kulturwissenschaften Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016438824&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT barkerchris culturalstudiestheoryandpractice |